IGBT with channel resistors

ABSTRACT

An IGBT has striped cell with source stripes  2   a   , 2   b  continuous or segmented along the length of the base stripe  3.  The opposite stripes are periodically connected together by the N+ contact regions  20  to provide channel resistance along the width of the source stripes  2   a   , 2   b . For continuous stripes the resistance between two sequential contact areas  20   a   , 20   b  is greatest in the middle and current concentrates near the source contact regions  20.  The wider the spacing between the contacts  20,  the larger the resistive drop to the midpoint between two N+ contacts  20.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/349,524, filed Jan. 18, 2002.

BACKGROUND

Insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs) are popular control devices for automobile ignition systems. The IGBT can carry large currents with very low resistance and can be rapidly switched on and off with a low voltage gate. They combine the control characteristics of DMOS devices with the current carrying capacity of thyristor.

A typical IGBT is shown in FIG. 4a. Those skilled in the art understand that some IGBTs are formed in striped cellular arrays of bases with sources. As shown in FIG. 4a, the IGBT 10 has an epitaxial layer 11 that includes two N+ source stripes regions 2 a, 2 b surrounded by P-typed base stripe regions 3. The portion 3 a of the base 3 that lies between the source stripes is designated as the body stripe. The epitaxial layer 11 has a lightly doped N drift region 5 over a heavily doped N buffer region 7. The epitaxial layer 11 is formed on top of a heavily P doped substrate 9. On top of the device, gate insulating stripes 17, typically of silicon dioxide, cover the top of the epitaxial layer 11. Gate conductive stripes 19, typically polysilicon 19, cover the insulating stripes 17 and form a gate electrode. The gate overlies channel stripes 30 a, 30 b on opposite sides of the base stripe 3. Another insulating layer 21 covers the polysilicon stripes 19 and a metal contact stripe 23 contacts the source stripes 2 a, 2 b, N+ source contact regions 20 and the body stripe 3 a of each cell. The above description is for a planar device with the gate on the surface. However, the IGBT may be fabricated with a trench gate. See FIG. 4b.

IGBTs may be used in ignition control circuits such as those shown in FIGS. 1 and 2. Those circuits are discussed in this Background portion of the specification in order to explain the invention. The location of that discussion and the discussion itself are not admissions that the circuits are prior art. When the IGBT 10 is on, it drops a low voltage V_(CE(sat)) and current flows through the primary side 12 of transformer 14. The ratio of the primary to the secondary coil 16 is about 100:1. The voltage is allowed to build to about 400 volts across the primary. When the spark plug is triggered, most of the energy is discharged in the spark. If there is any residual energy, it is dissipated by an auxiliary clamp circuit 80. In FIG. 1 the clamp circuit 80 a is a single pair or multiple pairs of Zener diodes 82, 84 with a cumulative breakdown voltage of about 400 volts. In FIG. 2 the clamp circuit 80 b is a voltage divider including resistors R1, R2 and a single pair or multiple pairs Zener diodes 86. After the gate signal is removed, auxiliary circuits 80 keep the IGBT 10 on in order to dissipate residual energy and prevent a localized failure.

The voltage for the auxiliary circuits 80 is set by the zener diodes to dissipate the energy over time. A problem arises if there is no spark due to, for example, a broken spark plug wire or a fouled plug. That leaves an open secondary 16 and the energy remains stored in the inductors 12, 16. With the gate turned off, the energy stored in the primary 12 cannot be transferred to the secondary 16. The primary 12 forces the voltage to rise until the zeners break down. In the self clamped inductive switching (SCIS) mode a portion of the collector current, Izener, is diverted from the collector and into the gate to keep the IGBT on. Then energy stored in the primary inductor 12 will dissipate even after the gate signal is removed.

In the SCIS mode the IGBT must absorb all the energy stored in the ignition coil during abnormal operating conditions. The most common abnormal condition is an open secondary. The silicon area of the IGBT is defined by its SCIS energy density capability. Therefore, it is imperative that the SCIS energy density (mJ/cm²) be increased because shrinking the silicon area reduces cost and the IGBT footprint is reduced to free up module space. A 60% reduction in the footprint can be realized by offering the same SCIS capability in the DPak (TO-252) rather than a D2Pak (TO-263). Supplying the same device performance in a DPak allows the module designer to add this functionality without increasing the module size.

In the clamping phase of the SCIS mode, a portion of the collector current is fed back to the gate after the diodes in FIGS. 1 and 2 avalanche. This current develops the required gate plateau voltage V_(GE(plateau)) across the R_(GE) or R₂ to deliver the necessary p-n-p base electron current required to conduct the total decaying current from the energy stored in the primary coil at the clamping voltage. See FIG. 3. The V_(GE(plateau)) continually self adjusts because it is a function of the IGBT threshold voltage (V_(th)), p-n-p current gain (α_(p-n-p)), Pbase leakage current, and channel mobility (μ_(ns)). All of the above are a function of the device temperature. So V_(GE(plateau)) decreases with temperature because of the following factors:

1. The V_(th) voltage has a negative temperature coefficient.

2. The α_(p-n-p) has a positive temperature coefficient, reducing the percentage of electron current to deliver the total decaying SCIS current.

3. The electron current generated from the Pbase leakage current has a positive temperature coefficient. Refer to stripe cell cross-section shown in FIG. 4. This reduces the amount of electron current required to drift across the channel because the leakage current can supply part of the p-n-p base current.

V_(GE(plateau)) increases with temperature because the degradation in μ_(ns) with increasing temperature causes a de-biasing effect.

Factors 1, 2, and 3 outweigh factor 4. So as the device 10 heats up and current decays V_(GE (plateau)) will decrease at an accelerated rate. If V_(GE (plateau)) reaches zero anywhere on the die while the temperature is still rising and an appreciable amount of current (>1A) is still decaying from the primary to induce localized thermal runaway, the device will fail to maintain the clamping function and may fail destructively. As such, it is desirable to find a solution for keeping V_(GE(plateau)) high during SCIS clamping.

Others have tried to extend the SCIS capability by decreasing the cell pitch to more uniformly distribute the heating during SCIS by reducing the localized current density. In some designs the cell is full channel and N+ channel doping is contacted along the entire length of the stripe as showed in FIG. 5. With such designs, V_(GE) (plateau) during SCIS is reduced because the electron current density per unit channel width is reduced. Thus, such designs fail to improve SCIS performance. Another design to improve SCIS performance relies upon dividing the channel width into multiple segments as shown in FIG. 6. The channel width is reduced by excluding the N+ channel doping. This can be accomplished by a simple lithographic bar pattern with the results shown in the bottom half of FIG. 6. The N+ doping need not be continuous across the contact opening as shown in the top half of FIG. 6. The segments of the channel can be connected in their centers or at their ends. See the versions showed in FIGS. 7 and 8. In both figures, contact is made again along the full length of the N+ channel doping. The N+ contact areas are not required, nor must they be continuous across the contact opening. These methods increase V_(GE(plateau)) and the electron current density per unit channel width. The higher electron current per unit channel width increases the maximum peak temperature before all the IGBT p-n-p base current can be supplied by the increasing Pbase leakage current.

SUMMARY

The invention improves SCIS performance by altering the structure of the source contact regions and by altering the structure of the sources. In particular, channel resistances are added to the device in order to more effectively distribute the heat across the surface of the die. The construction of the IGBT is altered so that contact to the source stripes is made only substantially through the source contact regions. As such, prior art techniques that relied upon contacting the source stripes along their entire length are not used. The portion of the source stripe adjacent the body region is either excluded from doping or is suitably shielded by an insulating layer. The invention also divides source stripes along the width of the channel into a plurality of segments. These segments may be of equal length and opposite each other and connected at their middles by a source contact region. In another embodiment the source stripe segments may be jogged with respect to each other so that the source contact region connects the head of one segment to the tail of another segment on the opposite side of the body stripe.

The invention provides an insulated bipolar transistor device (IGBT) that has a substrate heavily doped with a first dopant of one polarity, conventionally P-type doping. Above the substrate are buffer and drift layers typically comprising N-type dopants. The buffer layer is heavily doped and adjacent the substrate. The drift layer is more lightly doped and extends to the surface of the device. The surface of the device has a number of elongated base stripe regions formed with P-type dopants. Each base stripe region is bordered by the drift layer and extends along a length of the surface. The IGBT has numerous base stripes. Within each of the base stripes there are first and second source stripes. The source stripes are typically formed with N-type dopants and are located opposite each other and near the edges of their base stripe. The source stripes are essentially parallel to each other and extend in the same direction as the base stripes. A region in the base stripe and between the source stripes define a body stripe of P-type dopant. Portions of the base stripe between the source stripes and the proximate bordering drift layer define channel regions for the IGBT. A gate electrode is over each channel. The gate electrodes include gate oxide stripe, a conductive gate stripe and an insulating layer over the conductive gate stripe. A source contact layer, typically of metal, extends through vias in the insulating layer. The vias are at a number of locations aligned with the polysilicon gate and body stripe. The source contact layer fills the vias in the insulating layer and makes contact to a number of source contact regions. The source contact regions are typically heavily N-doped and are disposed in the body stripe. The source contact regions extend from the body stripe to one or both of the source stripes and are in electrical contact with the source contact layer. The insulating layer covers the portions of the source stripes that are proximate the body regions. Thus, the only contact to the source stripes is through the source contact regions.

In one embodiment, the source stripes are continuous and are periodically interconnected by source contact regions. The source contact regions and the source stripes may have the same heavy N-type doping. As an alternative, their stripes may have less of an N-type doping concentration. The invention also divides the source stripes into a plurality of elongated source segments comprising head and tail sections and elongated bodies. The source segments are spaced from each other along opposite sides of the body stripe. Portions of the body region extend between sequential head and tail sections of the segments in order to separate the sequential source stripe segments from each other. In one embodiment the source segments are the same length and are connected together at approximately the middle of their lengths by an source contact region. In another embodiment, the source stripes on either side of the body region are jogged with respect to each other. In that embodiment, the head of a source stripe on one side of the body stripe is connected across the body to the tail of another source stripe on the opposite side of the body stripe by a source contact region.

DRAWINGS

FIGS. 1 and 2 are circuit diagrams of IGBT driver circuits for automobile ignitions.

FIG. 3 is a graphic representation of operation of the IGBT before and during SCIS mode.

FIGS. 4a, 4 b show conventional surface gate and trench gate IGBTs.

FIGS. 4c, 4 d show expanded partial cross section and perspective views of a conventional surface gate IGBT.

FIG. 5 is a detailed expanded plan view of a conventional IGBT stripe cell.

FIG. 6 is a detailed expanded plan view of a conventional IGBT with source excluded sections.

FIG. 7 is a detailed expanded plan view of an IGBT stripe cell with source segments connected at their middles.

FIG. 8 is a detailed expanded plan view of an IGBT stripe cell with source segments connected head to tail.

FIG. 9 is a detailed expanded plan view of an IGBT with channel resistances.

FIG. 10 is a set of graphs comparing selected characteristics of the performance of a device made in accordance with FIG. 5 to those of a device made in accordance with FIG. 14.

FIG. 11 is another set of graphs comparing Pbase temperature and voltage characteristics of devices made in accordance with FIGS. 5 and 9.

FIG. 12 is a graph comparing the SCIS energy of a device made in accordance with FIGS. 5 and 14.

FIG. 13 is a detailed expanded plan view of an IGBT stripe cell with channel resistances and source segments connected at their middles.

FIG. 14 is a detailed expanded plan view of an IGBT stripe cell with channel resistances and source segments connected head to tail.

FIG. 15 is a partial expanded plan view of the invention in a trench gated IGBT with channel resistors along the width of the gate.

FIG. 16 is a partial expanded plan view of the invention in a trench gated IGBT with segmented sources contacted at their middles.

FIG. 17 is a partial expanded plan view of the invention in a trench gated IGBT with segmented sources contacted at their respective heads and tails.

FIGS. 18a and 18 b are cross-sectional views of one embodiment of a trench-gated and surface-gated IGBTs of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Details of the structure of typical prior art devices are shown in FIGS. 4c and 4 d. Those figures show two source stripes 2 a, 2 b within base strip 3. The gate electrodes 19 a, 19 b overly portions of the gate stripes to 2 a, 2 b and outer portions of the base stripe 3. The electrodes 19 a, 19 b induce channels 30 a, 30 b between the outer edges of the source stripes 2 a, 2 b and the drift layer 5. Dielectric stripes 21 a, 21 b enclose the upper portions of the gates 19 a, 19 b and have vias 40 for source contact metal. In a conventional IGBT the source contact metal 40 makes electrical and mechanical contact with source contact diffusion regions 20 a, 20 b, . . . 20 n as well as inside portions of the source strips 2 a, 2 b. Note that the inside portions designated 41 a, 41 b are contacted by the source metal 23.

FIG. 5 is a detailed plan of a portion of a stripe cell in the structure as illustrated in FIGS. 4a, 4 c and 4 d. The central portion shows two channel stripes 2 a, 2 b in base stripe 3 that are separated by portion 3 a of the base stripe. N+ contact regions 20 a, 20 b, 20 c are shown. Likewise, the source metal contacted regions 41 a, 41 b of the source stripes 2 a, 2 b are also shown. The source metal makes contact with the exposed portions of the N+ contact regions 20 and the portions 41 a, 41 b of the stripes 2 a, 2 b. Thus, the entire width of the channel is contacted by the source metal. That structure does not improve SCIS performance.

FIG. 6 shows one attempt to improve performance of the IGBT by dividing the source stripes into numerous source contact regions 20. Some of these regions extend across most of the base 3 to provide channel regions. See for example source contact regions 20 a-20 d. Other source contact regions such as 20 el and 20 er are spaced on opposite sides of the base stripe. It is not necessary that the source contact regions 20 be continuous across the base stripe 3. The structure shown in FIG. 6 is formed by providing a suitable mask that will exclude N+ source regions from undesired areas and leave only the Pbase 3 in those areas.

FIGS. 7 and 8 show further examples of speculative structures that can be made with prior art techniques. No admission is made in this application that FIGS. 7 and 8 are, per se, prior art. One could divide the source stripe 2 into a plurality of segments such as 2 a.1 that is opposite segment 2 b.1 and segment 2 a.2 that is opposite segment 2 b.2 . . . 2 a.n opposite 2 b.n. Each of the pairs of segments 2 a.n, 2 b.n are connected near the middle of their length by a heavily doped N+ contact 20. As such, N+ contact 20 b connects source segments 2 a.2 and 2 b.2. The regions 30 a, 30 b, . . . 30 n between the heads (H) and the tails (T) of the sequential source segments are P-doped as is the Pbase. A jogged or z-type structure is shown in FIG. 8. There, the head of a striped segment on one side is connected to the tail of the next sequential source stripe on the opposite side of the base 3. So, the head of source stripe segment 2 a.1 is connected via N+ contact region 20 b to the tail of source stripe segment 2 b.2.

The invention overcomes the problems of the prior art by isolating the source stripes from the source metal contact to increase the resistance of the channel along the width of the channel. In the embodiment shown in FIG. 9, these results are achieved by narrowing the source stripes 2 a, 2 b or extending the dielectric 21 a, 21 b so that the source stripes are entirely disposed beneath the dielectric layers 21 a, 21 b and are not contacted by the source metal 23. As such, the only contact to the source stripes 2 a, 2 b is through the periodic source contact regions 20. The stripes 2 a, 2 b remain continuous along the length of the base stripe 3. The source stripes on opposite sides of base stripe 3 are periodically connected together by N+ contact regions 20. That structure provides channel resistance along the width of the source stripes 2 a, 2 b. The resistance between two sequential contact areas 20 a, 20 b is greatest in the middle. As such, the channel resistors concentrate current near the source contact regions 20. The wider the spacing between the contacts 20, the larger the resistive drop to the midpoint between two N+ contacts 20 and the higher the N+ source contact resistance due to reduced contact area. The N+ contacts can be continuous across the contact opening or extend partially across as shown in the top portion of FIG. 6. The channel resistors function to locally offset decreases in V_(GE) (plateau) by constricting the flow of the electron current to smaller areas as the temperature increases due to the positive temperature coefficient of the resistor. While the larger spacings (50 um or greater) between N+ contacts further offset the decrease in V_(GE) (plateau) due to the increased contact resistance. When temperature rises in a certain area of the die due to SCIS induced self-heating, the voltage drop down the length of the local resistor and at the N+ contacts increases. The highest voltage drop is furthest from the N+ contact. Thus, a gradual de-biasing of the gate occurs along the channel resistor to the N+ contact. At room temperature, the de-biasing effect is small. An electron current flows through the channel almost uniformly down the length of the resistor. However, as the temperature increases and the current continues to decay, the conduction of the electron current through the channel starts to constrict along the entire channel resistor length to smaller areas directly across from the N+ contacts 20. This effectively reduces the channel width of the IGBT. The reduction in effective channel width of the IGBT forces the gate to maintain a higher bias to pass the total current. The effect of this structure is demonstrated in FIG. 10.

There the V_(GE) (plateau) of the full channel design (FIG. 5) decays linearly. However, the V_(GE) (plateau) is higher for the channel resistor design and has a nonlinear decay because the electron current is constricted as the temperature increases. The constriction of electron current into these smaller areas increases the maximum peak temperature before all the IGBT p-n-p base current can be supplied by the increasing Pbase leakage current. When this occurs, the IGBT gate control is lost, thermal runaway occurs, and the clamping function fails. This is demonstrated by the simulated wave forms in FIG. 11. Although the increase in channel resistance due to the temperature effect was not modeled, the simulations show that the device must reach 30° C. to 40° C. higher peak Pbase temperature for the clamping function to fail on the device with the channel resistance invention compared to the full channel device of FIG. 5. The temperature difference would be higher with the channel resistance temperature affect included. The measured comparison in SCIS energy density improvement as a function of starting junction temperature at the initiation of the SCIS mode is shown in FIG. 12. There it can be seen that the SCIS energy density is uniformly higher for the channel resistor as compared to the full channel for all temperatures.

The invention can also be applied to segmented source structures. Examples of the invention of such structures are shown in FIGS. 13 and 14. FIG. 13 has the source segments 2 a and 2 b disposed on opposite sides of the base stripe 3 and separated by the body 3 a. Note: that the contact opening is sized with the narrower source stripes 2 a, 2 b so that only the source contact regions 20 are available for contact. The heads and tails of sequential sources are separated by the Pbase region 3.

FIG. 14 adapts a z-shaped structure to the invention. There the source stripes 2 a are jogged with respect to the source stripes 2 b. As such, the head of one source stripe 2 a.1 terminates at about a location where an opposite, jogged source stripe tail of 2 b.2 begins. The source stripes are connected by N+ contacts 20 a.1, 20 a.2. As mentioned above, the contact may be continuous or may be interrupted. Either structure is suitable for the invention.

Having thus described the invention and several embodiments thereof, those skilled in the art will appreciate that further modifications, additions and omissions of elements may be made to the invention without departing from the spirit and structure as set forth in the claims. In particular, the invention can be adapted to trench gated IGBTs such as the samples shown in FIG. 4b. Turning to FIG. 15, the invention is showed in a trench gated IGBT. The gate polysilicon 19 is in the middle. Source stripes 2 a, 2 b and base stripes 300 a, 300 b are separated by the gate oxide 17 that cover the walls of the trench. The insulating layer 21 extends over the gate, over the source stripes 2 a, 2 b and over a portion of the base stripes 300 a, 300 b. Source contact regions 20 nl and 20 nr contact the source stripes 2 a, 2 b on opposite sides of the gate trench. Channel resistances CR are formed in the portions of the source stripes between the contact regions. This embodiment of the invention is similar to the planar gate embodiment shown in FIG. 9. FIGS. 16 and 17 show other trench gate embodiments that are similar respectively to the planar embodiments showed in FIGS. 13 and 14, respectively. In FIG. 16 selected portions of the source stripe are excluded to form source segments of equal length. The segments on opposite sides of the trench are contacted. In FIG. 17 source segments are jogged with respect to each other. Segments on opposite sides of the trench have source contacts at opposite heads and tails.

Those skilled in the art will understand that the invention may be embodied in other configurations. For example, the lengths of the channel resistors may be different depending upon their location. In general, shorter lengths closer to the center of the die are preferred. In addition opposing segments of the embodiment shown in FIGS. 13, 14 and 15, 16 do not have to be the same length. Similar results can be achieved by masking and doping the source stripes and source segments to alter the resistance of the channel resistors. Those skilled in the art also understand that the base stripes may be connected together at their ends to form a common base for the device.

Referring now to FIG. 18a, one embodiment of a trench-gated IGBT of the present invention is shown. IGBT 100 includes a plurality of N+ source contact regions 20 (only two of which are shown) that extend between the base regions 3 and source strips 2 a and 2 b, which are spaced apart along the length of the base stripes 3 and source stripes 2 a, 2 b. Insulating layer 21, in this embodiment, entirely covers the trench gate 19 and source strips 2 a and 2 b. A plurality of vias 102 (only two shown) are formed in known manner through insulating layer 21 over source contact regions 20. Source contact layer 23 is disposed over the insulating layer 21, and extends through vias 102 to thereby contact the source contact regions 20.

Referring now to FIG. 18b, one embodiment of a surface-gated IGBT of the present invention is shown. IGBT 200 includes a plurality of N+ source contact regions 20 (only one shown) that extend between the body stripe and the source stripes 2 a, 2 b, and which are spaced apart along the length of the base stripes 3 and source stripes 2 a, 2 b. Insulating layer 17 in this embodiment, entirely covers source stripes 2 a and 2 b. A plurality of vias 102 (only one shown) are formed in known manner through insulating layer 17 over source contact regions 20. Source contact layer 23 is disposed over the insulating layers 21 and 17, and extends through vias 102 to thereby contact source contact regions 20. 

What is claimed is:
 1. An insulated gate bipolar transistor device (IGBT) comprising: a substrate heavily doped with a first dopant of one polarity; buffer and drift layers doped with a second dopant of a polarity opposite to the first dopant, the buffer and drift layers located over the substrate, with the drift layer extending to a first surface, said first surface being opposite the substrate; at least one base region doped with the first dopant, each said at least one base region bordered by the drift layer, each said at least one base region extending along said first surface to form a corresponding at least one base stripe on said first surface; first and second source stripes doped with the second dopant and located in each said at least one base stripe, said source stripes being spaced apart from and substantially parallel relative to each other, said source stripes extending in a substantially parallel manner relative to the base stripe; a body stripe defined between said source stripes; first and second channel regions, each of said channel regions extending across a corresponding one of said at least one base stripe from a corresponding one of said source stripes to said drift layer in a direction away from said body stripe; a respective gate oxide stripe over each channel region; a respective conductive gate stripe on each gate oxide stripe for controlling current through the corresponding channel; a respective insulating layer over each conductive gate stripe, each insulating layer entirely covering a corresponding one of the source stripes; a source contact layer disposed at least in part between the conductive gate stripes and overlying said body stripe; a plurality of source contact regions heavily doped with the second dopant, said source contact regions disposed in the body stripe and extending from the body stripe to at least one of the source stripes and in electrical contact with the source contact layer, said source contact regions spaced apart from each other along said body stripe and along said source stripes; and wherein said source stripes are divided into a plurality of elongate source segments spaced from each other along opposite sides of the body stripe, portions of a corresponding one of said at least one base region disposed between opposite ends of sequential segments to separate the sequential source stripe segments form each other, said source stripes having forward and rearward ends and wherein corresponding ends of source stripes disposed on opposite sides of the body stripe and jogged with respect to each other.
 2. An insulated gate bipolar transistor device (IGBT), comprising: a substrate heavily doped with a first dopant of one polarity; buffer and drift layers doped with a second dopant of a polarity opposite to the first dopant, the buffer and drift layers located over the substrate, with the drift layer extending to a first surface, said first surface being opposite the substrate; at least one base region doped with the first dopant, each said at least one base region bordered by the drift layer, each said at least one base region extending along said first surface to form a corresponding at least one base stripes on said first surface; first and second source stripes doped with the second dopant and located in each said at least one base stripe, said source stripes being spaced apart from and substantially parallel relative to each other, said source stripes extending in a substantially parallel manner relative to the base stripe; a body stripe defined between said source stripe; first and second channel regions, each of said channel regions extending across a corresponding one of said at least one base stripe from a corresponding one of said source stripes to said drift layer in a direction away from said body stripe; a respective gate oxide stripe over each channel region; a respective conductive gate stripe on each gate oxide stripe for controlling current through the corresponding channel; a respective insulating layer over each conductive gate stripe, each insulating layer entirely covering a corresponding one of the source stripes; a source contact layer disposed at least in part between the conductive gate stripes and overlying said body stripe; a plurality of source contact regions heavily doped with the second dopant, said source contact regions disposed in the body stripe and extending from the body stripe to at least one of the source stripes and in electrical contact with the source contact layer, said source contact regions spaced apart from each other along said body stripe and along said source stripes; and wherein said source stripes are divided into a plurality of elongate source segments spaced apart from each other along opposite sides of the body stripe, portions of a corresponding one of said at least one base region disposed between opposite ends of sequential segments to separate the sequential source stripe segments from each other, said source segments having different lengths.
 3. An insulated gate bipolar transistor device (IGBT), comprising: a substrate heavily doped with a first dopant of one polarity; buffer and drift layers doped with a second dopant of a polarity opposite to the first dopant, the buffer and drift layers located over the substrate, with the drift layer extending to a first surface, said first surface being opposite the substrate; at least one base region doped with the first dopant, each said at least one base region bordered by the drift layer, each said at least one base region extending along said first surface to form a corresponding at least one base stripe on said first surface; first and second source stripes doped with the second dopant and located in each said at least one base stripe, said source stripes being spaced apart from and substantially parallel relative to each other, said source stripes extending in a substantially parallel manner relative to the base stripe; a body stripe defined between said source stripes; first and second channel regions, each of said channel regions extending across a corresponding one of said at least one base stripe from a corresponding one of said source stripes to said drift layer in a direction away from said body stripe; a respective gate oxide stripe over each channel region; a respective conductive gate stripe on each gate oxide stripe for controlling current through the corresponding channel; a respective insulating layer over each conductive gate stripe, each insulating layer entirely covering a corresponding one of the source stripes; a source contact layer disposed at least in part between the conductive gate stripes and overlying said body stripe; a plurality of source contact regions heavily doped with the second dopant, said source contact regions disposed in the body stripe and extending from the body stripe to at least one of the source stripes and in electrical contact with the source contact layer, said source contact regions spaced apart from each other along said body stripe and along said source stripes; and wherein said source stripes are divided into a plurality of elongate source segments spaced from each other along opposite sides of the body stripe, portions of a corresponding one of said at least one base region disposed between opposite ends of sequential segments to separate the sequential source stripe segments from each other, and wherein said source segments having respective and predetermined lengths, said predetermined lengths being dependent at least in part upon the proximity of said source segments to a center of the IGBT die, and said predetermined lengths being relatively shorter proximate to the center of the IGBT die.
 4. The IGBT of claim 3 wherein said predetermined lengths of said source segments are dependent upon a desired local SCIS current density.
 5. An insulated gate bipolar transistor device (IGBT), comprising: a substrate heavily doped with a first dopant of one polarity; a drift layer over the substrate and doped with a second dopant of an opposite polarity, the drift layer extending to a surface opposite the substrate; at least one base region doped with the first dopant, each said at least one base region bordered by the drift layer and extending along said surface to form a corresponding at least one base stripe on said surface of the device; source stripes with second dopants in each of said at least one base region, a body stripe defined between said source stripes, said source stripes for forming channel regions that extend across said base stripes proximate said surface from a corresponding one of said source stripes to said drift layer in a direction away from said body stripe; a respective insulated control gate overlying a corresponding base and source stripe over a corresponding channel region, each control gate including a gate stripe and an insulating layer, said insulating layer entirely covering a corresponding one of said source stripes; source contact regions disposed adjacent the source stripes, said source contact regions spaced apart from each other along said body stripe and along said source stripes; resistances formed within the source stripes between the source contact regions, said resistances constricting the flow of electron current between the drift layer and the source contact regions; and wherein said source stripes are sequentially segmented into sequential source segments, said sequential source segments being separated from each other by a portion of a corresponding one of said at least one base region said sequential source segments of opposite source stripes are jogged with respect to each other and are connected together at their opposite, jogged ends by a source contact region.
 6. An insulating gate bipolar transistor device (IGBT) comprising: a substrate heavily doped with a first dopant of one polarity; a drift layer over the substrate and doped with a second dopant of an opposite polarity, the drift layer defining a surface opposite the substrate; a trench gate in said surface including a gate insulator disposed between the trench gate and said surface, and a conductive material adjacent the gate insulator forming a gate electrode; base regions disposed on opposite sides of said gate trench and being doped with the first dopant, each base region bordered by the drift layer and extending along a length of said surface to form base stripes on said surface; source stripes disposed between the base stripes and the trench and shallower than the base for forming channel regions along opposite sides of the trench; an insulating layer entirely covering the trench gate and the source stripe regions; a plurality of vias in the insulating layer and over the source contact regions; source contact regions extending between the base regions and the source stripes, said source contact regions being spaced apart relative to each other and along the base and source stripes; a plurality of channel resistances in the source stripes and disposed between the source contact regions; and a source contact layer over the insulating layer and extending through the vias therein to contact the source contact regions in the source stripes.
 7. The IGBT of claim 6 wherein the base regions are connected together to form a common base.
 8. An insulating gate bipolar transistor device (IGBT), comprising: a substrate heavily doped with a first dopant of one polarity; a drift layer over the substrate and doped with a second dopant of an opposite polarity, the drift layer defining a surface opposite the substrate; a trench gate in said surface including a gate insulator disposed between the trench gate and said surface, and a conductive material adjacent the gate insulator forming a gate electrode; base regions disposed on opposite sides of said gate trench and being doped with the first dopant, each base region bordered by the drift layer and extending along a length of said surface to form base stripes on said surface; source stripes disposed between the base stripes and the trench and shallower than the base for forming channel regions along opposite sides of the trench; a insulating layer entirely covering the trench gate and the source stripe regions; a plurality of vias in the insulating layer over the source contact regions; source contact regions extending between the base regions and the source stripes, said source contact regions being spaced apart relative to each other and along the base and source stripes; a plurality of channel resistances in the source striped and disposed between the source contact regions; a source contact layer over the insulating layer and extending through the vias therein to contact the source contact regions in the source stripes; and wherein the source stripes are sequentially segmented into sequential segments, said sequential segments are separated from each other by a portion of a corresponding one of said base regions.
 9. The IGBT of claim 8 wherein source segments opposite each have source contact regions in the middle of the segments.
 10. The IGBT of claim 8 wherein the sequential segments of opposite source stripes are jogged with respect to each other, sequential segments on one side of the trench have source contact regions at a head end of the segments and sequential segments on the other side of the trench have source regions at a tail end of the segments, the head ends of the one segments are opposite the tail ends of the other segments.
 11. An insulated gate bipolar transistor device (IGBT) comprising: a substrate heavily doped with a first dopant of one polarity; a drift layer over the substrate and doped with a second dopant of an opposite polarity, the drift layer extending to a surface opposite the substrate; base regions doped with the first dopant, each base bordered by the drift layer and extending along a length of the surface to form a plurality of base stripes on the surface of the device; two source stripes regions disposed inside each base stripe, the source stripe regions shallower than the base for forming channel regions at a junction of the base stripe and the source stripe; source contact regions extending between the base regions and the source stripes, said source contact regions being spaced apart along a length of said source stripes; an insulating layer entirely covering the source stripes and having vias above the source contact regions; a source contact layer over the source stripes and in the vias for contacting the source contact regions; a plurality of channel resistances in the source stripes and disposed between the source contact regions; a gate including a gate insulator and conductive material adjacent the gate insulator forming the gate electrode, said gate disposed over the channel region formed by the base and source stripes; and wherein the base regions are connected together to form a common base.
 12. The IGBT of claim 8 wherein the gate is a trench gate extending from the surface into the base region. 